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  • Joe's Dad
    replied
    Originally posted by Josiah View Post
    Boringest:

    I-70 between Kansas City and Denver

    I-40 Shamrock to Flagstaff and Flagstaff to Bristow

    Most of I-20 lol

    I-8 Yuma to San Diego


    Prettiest Scenery

    I-90 Across Montana and down Thru Wyoming

    I-5 thru Oregon and Washington State

    I-80 Thru Utah and mostly Thru Wyoming

    I-25 Denver to Albuquerque
    Good list. Been on most. Haven't set foot in Oklahoma or Kansas. You have to include, I believe, I-15 (Loveland Pass between Denver and Las Vegas). I live in SoCal now. Beaches, mountains, blah, blah, blah. No sidewalks. Hearing the roosters welcoming the morning right now. No sidewalks! Google Ojai Valley! Just don't move here. lol

    Leave a comment:


  • Grits & Beans
    replied
    Originally posted by lbgood View Post
    Keep it up and it may be "end of the trail"
    i got your end of the trail you lil rascal...

    Leave a comment:


  • Maize-Grower
    replied
    Originally posted by Grits & Beans View Post
    I suppose someone told you to take a hike.


    And you did. You really did...


    okay i'll stop...haha
    It's how I keep my figure. lol

    That and salads!




    Micro Salad:
    Carrot, Micro-greens (mesculin, lettuce, southern giant mustard, mizuna, radish greens), orange and red cherry tomatoes, Siam Queen Basil, and lightly roasted butternut squash seeds... All from my garden.

    Dressing:
    California Olive Oil and good quality balsamic vinegar.

    Leave a comment:


  • lbgood
    replied
    Originally posted by Grits & Beans View Post
    I suppose someone told you to take a hike.


    And you did. You really did...


    okay i'll stop...haha
    Keep it up and it may be "end of the trail"

    Leave a comment:


  • Grits & Beans
    replied
    I suppose someone told you to take a hike.


    And you did. You really did...


    okay i'll stop...haha

    Leave a comment:


  • Maize-Grower
    replied
    View of the county seat from a hiking trail:

    Leave a comment:


  • Grits & Beans
    replied
    cactus body slam (viewer discretion is advised)

    .
    .
    .
    .

    don't do it Maize boy!


    don't do this to yourself!


    OMG he's really gonna do it!


    *closes eyes*


    Maize Boy vs Josiah


    Leave a comment:


  • Josiah
    replied
    Originally posted by lbgood View Post
    That is a pretty area - back in the day Tenkillers BBQ was a good place to eat, too bad it closed down. I also like going to Stillwell for the strawberry festival and Cherokee National Holiday during labor day weekend. I miss canoeing down the Illinois river too. And Missionary Ridge is an awesome sight in the fall with the trees changing colors - desert my @.SS I have no idea wut that fool is talking about. But I have since moved back to my Rez which is just as beautiful
    I was over that way last Weekend!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Josiah
    replied
    Originally posted by OLChemist View Post
    Oh, I don't want to hear about boring drives. Try the wide part of TX -- I-10 or I-20 to I-10. Just in case you needed a reference for infinity. There is a lot of pretty scenery, but you're in wall to wall trucks going 75mph. You don't dare look at the scenery.

    Nashville to Cincinnati can be pretty grim too.
    Boringest:

    I-70 between Kansas City and Denver

    I-40 Shamrock to Flagstaff and Flagstaff to Bristow

    Most of I-20 lol

    I-8 Yuma to San Diego


    Prettiest Scenery

    I-90 Across Montana and down Thru Wyoming

    I-5 thru Oregon and Washington State

    I-80 Thru Utah and mostly Thru Wyoming

    I-25 Denver to Albuquerque

    Leave a comment:


  • OLChemist
    replied
    Oh, I don't want to hear about boring drives. Try the wide part of TX -- I-10 or I-20 to I-10. Just in case you needed a reference for infinity. There is a lot of pretty scenery, but you're in wall to wall trucks going 75mph. You don't dare look at the scenery.

    Nashville to Cincinnati can be pretty grim too.

    Leave a comment:


  • lbgood
    replied
    Originally posted by Josiah View Post
    I am from around Lake Tenkiller and I can say that is some of the prettiest places I have ever been. (I lived in Western Washington for 20 years)
    That is a pretty area - back in the day Tenkillers BBQ was a good place to eat, too bad it closed down. I also like going to Stillwell for the strawberry festival and Cherokee National Holiday during labor day weekend. I miss canoeing down the Illinois river too. And Missionary Ridge is an awesome sight in the fall with the trees changing colors - desert my @.SS I have no idea wut that fool is talking about. But I have since moved back to my Rez which is just as beautiful
    Last edited by Toolbox; 09-03-2014, 02:59 PM. Reason: Removed mention tag

    Leave a comment:


  • Toolbox
    replied
    This thread was hijacked very early on.


    Whenever anyone brings up the topic of driving across country I always hear "Avoid Oklahoma, it is the most boring state to drive though". I completely disagree with them, Indiana and Illinois are the most boring states to drive though - if you only stick to the interstates that is. Oklahoma is a really nice drive and there is plenty of pretty sights especially the prairie. Maybe he is referring to the red dirt as being desert like? The dry heat in some areas is something to be envious of especially given that the humidity here has been awful this week.

    It is all about perspective. I like where I live, between the largest city and the 5th largest city in the US. We have a lot within only a few hours drive - large cities, infrastructure, lakes, streams, rivers, parks, woodlands, mountains, and beaches/ocean. Some people like the big city life and some people like the small town. Personally I prefer the suburbs, it's quiet and between the big city and the country side - and we just got symmetrical fiber which is awesome for nerds like me.

    Leave a comment:


  • Josiah
    replied
    Originally posted by OLChemist View Post
    Desert?

    The Springfield Plateau and the Boston Mnts in Northeast OK are pretty country. Not desert like at all. I'm told the fishing on Tenkiller Lake is pretty good. The area is hickory oak forest like much of the Tennessee Valley. The understory and floor growth is different.

    But you come out here to TX. We'll take you down to Big Bend and show you some desert :)
    I am from around Lake Tenkiller and I can say that is some of the prettiest places I have ever been. (I lived in Western Washington for 20 years)

    Leave a comment:


  • Josiah
    replied
    Originally posted by OLChemist View Post
    At the risk of thread highjacking....

    It's funny how our experience the plants and topography surrounding us shape our expectations. I grew up going back and forth between NW Nebraska and SW Pennsylvania. Some black eyed susans, flowering spurge and ironweed growing the along the ditch or fence line, or some jewel weed, may apples and a beech tree or two and my internal compass says I know where I am. I didn't have to have a clear line of sight.

    When I was an ungrad my roommate (soon to be best friend), raised within 1/4 mile of the Pacific Ocean in the wilds of Palos Verdes, commented as we were driving TN 73 through the mountains, that she felt a little claustrophobic. There could be anything lurking out there in those trees. I laughed at her. I loved the area, it felt homey.

    After a decade and a half away from the area, living in NM and TX, I was able to start going back east. I was traveling with my former roommate down TN 73 heading into Townsend. I had been oddly tense since leaving the interstate. I realized I was missing my clear light of sight.

    Well that was a lame observation on human nature.
    Reminds me of a story about Topography:
    I started a job in Washington State some years ago and upon hearing I was from Oklahoma a coworker tells me:
    "we once drove thru Oklahoma"... it was nothing but Sagebrush and Sand!!
    I asked them what part of the State did they drive thru and what time of the Year and they said: Well I-40 of course and it was May...
    So then I asked what towns did they remember passing thru and they said well it was the middle of the night mostly, but they do remember stopping in a little town to get gas early in the morning and it was called Tucumcari! I said well you do realize that is in New Mexico right?? They said no waaay! They thought the Dust Bowl was still in full force and just assumed that all of Oklahoma looked that way!!

    I have traveled from Coast to Coast and I still hear the Dust Bowl story and when I tell them no we do have trees I am told they don't believe me!!

    BTW Most of the effects of the Dust Bowl were to the West of Oklahoma in the Panhandle of Texas, New Mexico, Kansas and Colorado but because of the Movie the Grapes of Wrath people still believe that Oklahoma is a Dust Bowl and a Desert

    Leave a comment:


  • OLChemist
    replied
    At the risk of thread highjacking....

    It's funny how our experience the plants and topography surrounding us shape our expectations. I grew up going back and forth between NW Nebraska and SW Pennsylvania. Some black eyed susans, flowering spurge and ironweed growing the along the ditch or fence line, or some jewel weed, may apples and a beech tree or two and my internal compass says I know where I am. I didn't have to have a clear line of sight.

    When I was an ungrad my roommate (soon to be best friend), raised within 1/4 mile of the Pacific Ocean in the wilds of Palos Verdes, commented as we were driving TN 73 through the mountains, that she felt a little claustrophobic. There could be anything lurking out there in those trees. I laughed at her. I loved the area, it felt homey.

    After a decade and a half away from the area, living in NM and TX, I was able to start going back east. I was traveling with my former roommate down TN 73 heading into Townsend. I had been oddly tense since leaving the interstate. I realized I was missing my clear light of sight.

    Well that was a lame observation on human nature.

    Leave a comment:

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